Calancie Blair, Molano Maria R
Department of Neurosurgery, Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY, USA.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2008 Feb 15;33(4):406-14. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0b013e3181642a2f.
Combined prospective and retrospective.
Evaluate 2 published criteria for interpreting motor-evoked potentials (MEP) in response to repetitive transcranial electrical stimulation (rTES) during surgery.
There is controversy regarding how to interpret MEPs elicited by rTES. Many centers warn the surgical team only if the MEP is lost entirely ("Presence-or-Absence" method). Alternatively, we monitor the stimulus energy needed to elicit a minimal evoked EMG response; significant increases in this energy reflect impending motor tract injury and serve as the basis for warning the surgical team ("Threshold-Level" method).
We documented target muscle thresholds for rTES throughout each subject's surgical procedure. The time (in hours) between intraoperative threshold change and (a) complete loss of response or (b) until the end of the surgical procedure was determined. Short-term postoperative motor status was documented by either direct physical examination or by chart review.
We enrolled 903 subjects, from whom intraoperative rTES-evoked responses could be elicited in 859 subjects. Of these, 93 subjects sustained intraoperative damage to central motor pathways. Significant increases in target muscle thresholds were often noted many minutes, and sometimes hours before complete signal loss. In other cases, thresholds increased significantly without ever losing the muscle response.
The Threshold-Level method is highly sensitive and specific to deterioration in central motor function, and provides early warning of such an event. Conversely, in some cases the Presence-or-Absence method may fail to detect episodes of partial loss, and in other cases typically introduces a delay between the times when motor dysfunction begins to occur and when the response is lost (at which time an alarm is triggered). We conclude that use of the Presence-or-Absence alarm criteria for interpreting MEPs during surgery is often incompatible with the requirement for accurate and early warning of impending injury to central motor pathways, and should be avoided.
前瞻性与回顾性相结合。
评估2种已发表的用于解释手术期间重复经颅电刺激(rTES)诱发的运动诱发电位(MEP)的标准。
关于如何解释rTES诱发的MEP存在争议。许多中心仅在MEP完全消失时才向手术团队发出警告(“存在或缺失”方法)。另外,我们监测诱发最小肌电图反应所需的刺激能量;该能量的显著增加反映即将发生的运动传导束损伤,并作为向手术团队发出警告的依据(“阈值水平”方法)。
我们记录了每位受试者整个手术过程中rTES的目标肌肉阈值。确定术中阈值变化与(a)反应完全丧失或(b)直至手术结束之间的时间(以小时为单位)。术后短期运动状态通过直接体格检查或病历回顾进行记录。
我们纳入了903名受试者,其中859名受试者术中可引出rTES诱发反应。其中,93名受试者术中中央运动通路受损。在完全信号丧失前的数分钟,有时甚至数小时,经常会注意到目标肌肉阈值显著增加。在其他情况下,阈值显著增加但肌肉反应从未丧失。
“阈值水平”方法对中央运动功能恶化具有高度敏感性和特异性,并能提供此类事件的早期预警。相反,在某些情况下,“存在或缺失”方法可能无法检测到部分丧失的情况,而在其他情况下,通常会在运动功能障碍开始出现与反应丧失(此时触发警报)之间引入延迟。我们得出结论,在手术期间使用“存在或缺失”警报标准来解释MEP通常与对中央运动通路即将发生损伤进行准确和早期预警的要求不相符,应予以避免。